"Professional Dancer"

So this thread is gonna stay in this forum cause I know I will get so much flack if this showed up in the general forum. Well fellas what do you guys think about a "Professional Dancer" transitioning into the healthcare field by paying her way through school by "Dancing". Keep in mind I don't mean interpretive dance, ballet, break dancing, the robot.. hahaha..etc get the idea yet. This popped in my head as my friends and I were celebrating a divorce party.

I know most of these stories about them doing this for school is fake... but let us entertain the idea for a moment. Imagine you heading off to the ICU , or where ever, to start off your shift. You open the door and there she is standing in front of you is Candy, Mandy, Riley, Sandy....insert stage name here, that you got a lap dance from. Obviously she wont remember you but let us entertain the other idea that she does and gets that OMG look on her face LOL. How would that scenario run? Would you think less of her as a professional? Feel free to throw in any thoughts.

I just had to put the scenario up today, and yes I know I will most likely get some hate flame on this.

I am a woman ... but had to peek at this thread because of its title. As a woman, I wouldn't think less of a colleague who had been an "exotic" dancer. It's a skill and a job. It's no different than knowing the surgeon cheats on his wife ... or was that obnoxious frat-boy who did God knows what back in college.

I am a woman ... but had to peek at this thread because of its title. As a woman, I wouldn't think less of a colleague who had been an "exotic" dancer. It's a skill and a job.

A girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.

Thanks for your input. People have to pay for tuition one way or another.

Jun 28, '11

I am a female too, but I would say it doesn't matter at all, all that matters is that you are a good nurse when you become one.

Just be warned it is not the wide open field it used to be and very competitive.

Jun 28, '11

Id help you pay tuition. Wouldn't think badly about it either.

Jul 1, '11

Yeah. Sure. I've worked with a couple. It pretty much goes with the Rule of Stupids:
1. Don't hang with Stupid People
2. Don't do Stupid Things
3. Don't go to Stupid Places (where 1 & 2 converge and are encouraged)

One individual was d/cd for sampling phramaceutical products, one(paramedic) was given a choice of either/or in careers because the night job was endangering her partner on days, and a third had "relational" issues with patients.

Limited decisional processes are indicactive of limited personal growth(Erickson) and diminished cost-benefit/risk assessment capacity. As with most things, it is possible to note individual outliers, but generalization is certainly possible and valid.

Are you trying to validate or pursue a fantasy? Because this:

...but let us entertain the other idea that she does and gets that OMG look on her face LOL. How would that scenario run?

reads more like a "C'mere Nursie/French Maid/Teacher/Whatever" than any kind of serious professional debate.

Jul 1, '11

Oh, heck, I'll go with it:

She'll get black-balled by the blue-balls unless she plays ball in which case she'll be balls-up for getting balled.

Yeah. Sure. I've worked with a couple. It pretty much goes with the Rule of Stupids:
1. Don't hang with Stupid People
2. Don't do Stupid Things
3. Don't go to Stupid Places (where 1 & 2 converge and are encouraged)

One individual was d/cd for sampling phramaceutical products, one(paramedic) was given a choice of either/or in careers because the night job was endangering her partner on days, and a third had "relational" issues with patients.

Limited decisional processes are indicactive of limited personal growth(Erickson) and diminished cost-benefit/risk assessment capacity. As with most things, it is possible to note individual outliers, but generalization is certainly possible and valid.

Are you trying to validate or pursue a fantasy? Because this: reads more like a "C'mere Nursie/French Maid/Teacher/Whatever" than any kind of serious professional debate.

Her realizing that you were a previous customer who now works in the same professional setting is what is causing the OMG look on her face. I asked about how people think the scenario would play out because I wanted to know if it would be an awkward work environment, how would it affect either of you, etc etc.

I am not making this scenario up, I actually had a long conversation with a stripper at a divorce party, and she mentioned she just finished her pre-reqs for RN ADN. It is not that ridiculous to think that one day you will run into someone you have known from a previous life before passing the NCLEX-RN. Keep in mind it was a divorce party for a friend and some of my co-workers were also present, what happens when they realize who the new-grad is and the rumor mill goes into full swing?

Not trying to validate a personal fantasy at all. I have run in to the poisoned well scenario before, and I know how the work environment quickly turns into an ugly rumor mill. I would rather not relive that adventure anytime soon. If it seemed like I was trying to get with the stripper in the closet then I must apologize for the confusion. I hope this clarifies things.

Jul 2, '11

I have known strippers tha become RNs. I don't even think about it twice. If someone asks me about it I just tell them that if they think that's bad they don't wanna know anything about my past... I have been a well respected leader in my job and prior jobs, that usually stops the bs pretty quick. People need to grow up.

Jul 2, '11

What about it is "professional?

And if the "dancer" is truly okay with stripping, then does it really matter what other people think? If the dancer is truly okay with stripping, this question would be asked.

It's not generally thought of as a respectable profession, and some probably ARE working their way through college, but I wonder what the numbers are on that.